Kata Guide

Rohai

Rohai is an advanced Wado-Ryu kata known for its balance work, focused posture and distinctive changes in body height and stance. It asks the student to stay composed while moving through controlled, deliberate techniques.

This page is designed as a practical training guide for Jewel Karate Club students. Use it to support class training, revision and home practice, while always following the version taught by your instructor.

Kata

Rohai

Level

Advanced kata

Focus

Balance, posture, control

Rohai embusen overview

Pattern and reference images

Use the embusen and visual references to understand the line of Rohai and how the kata changes level and balance through the sequence.

Rohai embusen diagram
Animated Rohai reference

The aim is not just to remember the order, but to keep the kata balanced, upright and controlled from beginning to end.

Rohai full reference chart

Video walkthrough

Watch the full kata through first, then go back and work on the balance sections, stance changes, posture and the clear finish of each technique.

About Rohai

Kata are structured forms that help develop both physical technique and mental discipline. In Wado-Ryu, each kata teaches posture, timing, balance, awareness and the ability to connect attack and defence together with control.

Rohai is a kata that emphasises upright posture, one-leg balance, controlled movement and clean directional changes. It often feels very different from the more direct rhythm of the Pinan kata.

Students should aim not only to remember the sequence, but also to perform it with calm focus, stable balance and strong finishing positions throughout.

Rohai often improves when students slow it down and pay close attention to posture and control rather than trying to force speed into the kata.

Key checkpoints

Balance

Keep the balance sections steady and controlled. Do not wobble or rush through them.

Posture

The upper body should stay upright and composed, especially during the one-leg positions.

Stance changes

Rohai moves through different heights and stances. Keep each change clean and deliberate.

Control

Every block, strike and transition should show a clear start, finish and moment of control.

Step-by-step (Student Guide)

Clear and simple

Step 1 – Ready position

Stand in attention stance, bow, then open into ready stance. Start calmly and with good posture.

Step 2 – Opening turn and first block

Turn into the opening stance with control and complete the first blocking action clearly. Do not rush the start.

Step 3 – Balance section

Lift into the balance position with control and stay upright. This section should look steady, not hurried.

Step 4 – Set down and continue the line

Place the foot down carefully and move into the next stance without wobbling. Finish the following technique clearly.

Step 5 – Turn and change direction

Make the turn cleanly and settle before delivering the next block or strike. Rohai should look composed, not rushed.

Step 6 – Controlled striking section

Work through the next sequence with compact, direct technique. Keep the posture upright and the stance stable.

Step 7 – Second balance and stance change

Move into the next balance section with the same control as before. Land the following stance cleanly and keep the body still.

Step 8 – Final sequence

Work through the last section with the same concentration and care as the start. Do not let the quality drop near the end.

Finish

Return to ready stance, pause, then bow. The kata should end with the same focus it started with.

Training note

Learn the order first, then improve the quality. Focus on balance, upright posture, clean stance changes and strong finishing positions. Always follow the version taught in your own dojo.

Common faults

Wobbling in balance positions

The balance sections should look calm and steady, not shaky.

Rising up too much

Changes in height should be controlled, not exaggerated or bouncy.

Poor posture

Leaning forward or collapsing the body weakens the whole kata.

Untidy stance changes

If the feet and stance changes are loose, the kata loses its clean shape.

Rushing the transitions

Rohai needs control and timing. Going too fast spoils the balance and rhythm.

Relaxing before the end

Keep the same concentration right through the final section and bow.

Keep studying the kata syllabus

Return to the full kata list or jump back to the top of this page to review Rohai again.